KWIC October 28: China claims that it will increase the proportion of
volunteer soldiers and that by the end of the year of 2000, this proportion
will have risen to 35%.
The new military service law include changing the existing term of service
for the compulsory servicemen to two years and eliminating the regulation
of the extended service.
The new military service law shortens the term of service for the
compulsory soldiers and in the meantime, increases the number of the
"volunteer soldiers". These adjustments are based on the two
considerations. First, it is the reform complementary to the plan of
cutting the military troops by 500 thousand people.
The revised military service law will also make some adjustments in the
military service system. The emphasis will no longer be on the service
system of the compulsory servicemen alone, but instead, it has shifted to
the combination of both the volunteer soldiers and the compulsory
servicemen. At present, the Chinese volunteer soldiers account for 18% of
the total. By the end of 2000, this proportion will have increased to 35%.
China has repeatedly emphasized that it will realize the two "fundamental
changes" in its military construction by the end of this century. It is
quality, not quantity, that should be given the first place. All the
articles that the military scholars have written believe that the system of
the "volunteer soldiers" is the major direction of the future military
reform and is also the trend of the world. This system is the guarantee of
creating and maintaining a large quantity of the "knowledge-intensive"
military human resources.
China has faced the same reform problem as Russia does in increasing the
volunteer soldiers. Russia, too, adopts the mixed military service system
characterized by the combination of both the compulsory servicemen and the
contract soldiers. It is now trying to gradually increase the proportion of
the contract soldiers. Now, the Russian contract soldiers constitute 25% of
the total. Russia is considering the reform plan of implementing the
contract system in an all-rounded way and "establishing the national armed
forces on a career basis". However, the above reform plan has received a
strong resistance from the Russian army and various parties. The major
obstacle to the implementation of this reform plan is the lack of funds.
According to the estimation made by the General Organization and
Mobilization Bureau of Russia's Headquarters of the General Staff, it costs
2.5 times more to maintain a contract soldier than to maintain a compulsory
serviceman. For this reason, the Russian army is planning to reach the goal
of building the fully career-based military forces stage by stage. For the
first stage, by the year of 2000, the contract system will be set for the
military units and forces that join the Peace-keeping Forces or carry out
missions in the regions of military conflicts. For the second stage, the
goal of building the career-based military forces will be fully achieved by
the year of 2005.
It is worth noting that both China and Russia have realized that it is
imperative to build the fully career-based military forces and that it is
just a matter of time to do so. As a ban has been imposed on the army's
engaging in trade, the army will see a decrease in its revenue. Under these
circumstances, a rise in the proportion of the "volunteer soldiers" implies
that the military expenditure of China will definitely increase by a large
margin for the year of 1999. ( KWIC )